| Literature DB >> 31476156 |
David Lanham1, Sana Ali2, Daniel Davis1, Mark James Rawle1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease remains the most common cause of death in industrialized countries. The use of beta-blockers is well established as a secondary prevention of myocardial infarction. However, little is known about the benefits of beta-blockers for people living with dementia.Entities:
Keywords: Beta-blockers; dementia; myocardial infarction; secondary prevention; systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31476156 PMCID: PMC6839460 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-190503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig. 1Study flow diagram.
Papers eligible for full screening
| Study title | Type of study | Average age | Gender split M/F | Total no participants | No participants cognitive impairment | No on beta-blockers | Was association made | Comments |
| Differences in management and outcomes for men and women with ST-elevation myocardial infarction [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 63 | 2183/715 | 2898 | 67 | 2370 | NO | Review of STEMI management between gender, does not review relationship between beta-blockers and patients with dementia |
| Secondary Prevention Medication Use After MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION in U.S. Nursing Home Residents [ | Retrospective cohort study | 84 | 3165/8027 | 11192 | 9348 | 6369 | NO | does not directly investigate beta blocker use and unclear if all secondary prevention medication was commenced. |
| The prescription of antiplatelet medication in a very elderly population: An observational study in 15 141 ambulatory subjects [ | Retrospective observational | 86 | 5860/9281 | 15141 | 1188 | 5955 | NO | Had data on patients with cognitive impairment and who took beta-blockers but no way of inferring between the two as direct association not investigated |
| Association of | Propensity matched cohort | 84 | 3204/7788 | 10992 | 3916 | 5496 | YES | Associated with increased functional decline, but lower mortality rates |
| Blood Pressure Lowering Medication, Visit-to-Visit Blood Pressure Variability, and COGNITIVE Function in Old Age [ | Data from PROSPER RCT | /// | /// | /// | /// | /// | EXCLUDE | patients with cognitive impairment were excluded at start |
| Ischemic heart disease, prescription of optimal medical therapy and geriatric syndromes in community-dwelling older men: A population-based study [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 77 | 1694/0 | 1694 | 214 of which 59 had IHD | 375 of which 191 had IHD | NO | looked at participants with IHD who had cognitive impairment and with IHD on beta-blocker, but no comparisons drawn |
| The design and rationale of a multicenter clinical trial comparing two strategies for control of systolic blood pressure: The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (SPRINT) [ | Multicenter RCT | /// | /// | /// | /// | /// | EXCLUDE | patients with cognitive impairment were excluded at start |
| Effect of DEMENTIA on the use of drugs for secondary prevention of ischemic heart disease [ | retrospective cohort analysis | 76.6 | 567/520 | 1087 | 265 | 229 – (8 with dementia) | NO | does not look at effect of beta-blocker use on outcome |
| Prevalence and correlates of cardiovascular medication use among nursing home residents with ischemic heart disease: results from the SHELTER study. [ | retrospective cohort analysis | ∼85 | 286/764 | 1050 | 693 | 353 | NO | notes participants who have dementia, no specific numbers on comparing beta-blocker and no beta-blocker with those who do have dementia and no mention of outcome. |
| Mid-term mortality of very elderly patients with acute MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION with or without coronary intervention [ | Observational study | ∼85 | 41/36 | 77 | 10 | 22 | NO | comparing PCI to no PCI with different outcomes |
| COGNITIVE function and antihypertensive treatment in the elderly: a 6-year follow-up study [ | Follow up study | 77 | ∼ | 518 | ? | 61 | EXCLUDE | Although association drawn between MMSE and beta-blocker use, not a baseline cognitive impaired cohort and not a previous MI cohort |
| Effects of cardiovascular medications on rate of functional decline in Alzheimer disease [ | prospective Cohort Study | ∼86 | N/A | 216 | 216 | 33 | NO | did not associate whether participants had previous MI and use of beta-blocker in the outcome |
| A review of the management of heart failure in long-term care residents [ | cross sectional study | 83.2 | 98/207 | 302 | Not known | Not Known | NO | UNABLE TO OBTAIN FULL PAPER but abstract making no suggestion of association being made as only 30% of patients had either IHD OR dementia |
| Association between functional status and use and effectiveness of beta-blocker prophylaxis in elderly survivors of acute myocardial infarction [ | cross sectional/retrospective study | 75 | 24645/20695 | 45730 | 2143 | 22683 | NO | only 25% IHD, 8000 prescribed beta-blocker prior to admission, looks at prescription with outcome, but not associated with dementia |
| The effect of dementia on outcomes and process of care for Medicare beneficiaries admitted with acute myocardial infarction [ | Retrospective chart review | 75 | 68637/60455 | 129092 | 5851 | 39556 | YES | mortality higher in dementia patients but proportion on beta-blockers same across groups |
| [Use of diagnostic and therapeutic resources in patients hospitalized for heart failure: influence of admission ward type (INCARGAL Study)] [ | Cross sectional study | /// | /// | /// | /// | /// | EXCLUDE | article in Spanish |
| Multifactorial cardiovascular disease prevention in patients aged 75 years and older: A randomized controlled trial: Drugs and Evidence Based Medicine in the Elderly (DEBATE) Study [ | RCT | /// | /// | /// | /// | /// | EXCLUDE | No clear data on patients with cognitive impairment |
| Occurrence and progression of DEMENTIA in a community population aged 75 years and older: relationship of antihypertensive medication use [ | Cohort study | 82.5 | 514/1296 | 1810 | 224 | Not known | NO | No clear data on which patients had established MI |
| Beta-blocker Use in U.S. Nursing Home Residents After Myocardial Infarction: A National Study [ | Retrospective cohort study | 83 | 4580/11140 | 15720 | 12797 | 8953 | NO | Does not compare mortality between dementia and non-dementia patients with and without beta blockade |
| Outcomes of Acute Myocardial Infarction in Nonagenarians [ | Retrospective chart review | 93 | 60/117 | 177 | 41 | 158 | NO | Does not compare mortality between dementia and non-dementia patients with and without beta blockade |
| The impact of DEMENTIA on the outcomes of treatments for acute coronary syndrome [ | Retrospective cohort study | 66 | 139993/72117 | 212110 | Not known | Not known | NO | Does not identify effect of beta-blocker alone on outcome in dementia versus non dementia patients |
IHD, ischemic heart disease; MI, myocardial infarction; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Eligible studies included in systematic review
| Citation | Study design | Sample | Setting | Data collection | Outcome measures | Co-variates | Summary findings | Quality |
| Sloan FA, Trogdon JG, Curtis LH, Schulman KA. The effect of dementia on outcomes and process of care for Medicare beneficiaries admitted with acute myocardial infarction [ | Retrospective cohort study | Any Medicare users with or without dementia admitted for an acute myocardial infarction between 1994 and 1995 ( | USA | Medical record review, noting use of beta-blockers and other secondary preventative measures | 30 day and 1-year mortality | age, sex, admission source, co-morbidities, and severity of cardiac illness. | Crude differences in percentage taking beta-blockers with respect to mortality (31.1% no dementia versus 21% dementia | FAIR rating 7 Stars -Newcastle-Ottawa assessment |
| Steinman MA, Zullo AR, Lee Y, Daiello LA, Boscardin WJ, Dore DD, et al. Association of B-blockers with functional outcomes, death, and rehospitalization in older nursing home residents after acute myocardial infarction [ | Retrospective Cohort Study | Nursing home residents over 65 who had been admitted to hospital with an acute myocardial infarction in the USA between 2007 and 2010 ( | Nursing Home, USA | National data from Minimum data set 2.0 and Medicare Parts A and D which includes assessments of nearly all nursing home residents in USA | 90-day mortality, functional decline and rehospitalization. | Propensity Scoring (key co-variates: Baseline functional status, cognitive function, age, presence or absence of an intensive care unit or cardiac care unit stay during the AMI hospitalization) | Decreased risk of death at 90 days HR 0.74 (95% CI 0.64– 0.86) among individuals on beta-blockers. Functional decline in patients with moderate to severe cognitive impairment and who were on a beta-blocker OR 1.34 (95% CI 1.11– 1.61). | GOOD rating 8 Stars– Newcastle-Ottawa assessment |